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author | Felix Bier <Felix.Bier@rohde-schwarz.com> | 2021-02-13 23:18:17 +0000 |
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committer | Matt Turner <mattst88@gentoo.org> | 2021-02-20 16:27:29 -0500 |
commit | 4fd2ac23250ab2ac1f6a506ee433f466a4f9e026 (patch) | |
tree | 390e4742119ee37248ecba1b8823e4fc49cd123e | |
parent | Drop PORTDIR from make.conf (diff) | |
download | catalyst-4fd2ac23250ab2ac1f6a506ee433f466a4f9e026.tar.gz catalyst-4fd2ac23250ab2ac1f6a506ee433f466a4f9e026.tar.bz2 catalyst-4fd2ac23250ab2ac1f6a506ee433f466a4f9e026.zip |
Enable recursive globbing for clear_path
This commit enables recursive globbing in clear_path, allowing the
usage of '**' to match an arbitrary number of sub-directories.
Before this commit, clear_path used only non-recursive globbing. This
allowed to use '*' to expand names within one directory, e.g. '/a/*/c'
can expand to '/a/b/c', but not '/a/b/b/c'. With this commit, '/a/**/c'
can be used to expand to '/a/b/c', '/a/b/b/c', '/a/b/b/b/c' etc.
This is motivated by wanting to recursively delete all occurences of a
filename with the 'stage4/rm' entry of a spec file. The '/rm' entries
are processed with 'clear_path' in the existing code.
Additionally, 'glob.glob' is replaced with 'glob.iglob',
which returns the same files as 'glob.glob', but as an iterator
instead of as a list (so it no longer necessary to hold
all matches in memory at once).
Recursive globbing has been added in Python 3.5.
References:
https://docs.python.org/3/library/glob.html#glob.glob
https://docs.python.org/3/library/glob.html#glob.iglob
Signed-off-by: Felix Bier <felix.bier@rohde-schwarz.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gentoo.org>
-rw-r--r-- | catalyst/fileops.py | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/catalyst/fileops.py b/catalyst/fileops.py index 5c6f5cd8..59525420 100644 --- a/catalyst/fileops.py +++ b/catalyst/fileops.py @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ def clear_dir(target, mode=0o755, remove=False, def clear_path(target_path): """Nuke |target_path| regardless of it being a dir, file or glob.""" - targets = glob.glob(target_path) + targets = glob.iglob(target_path, recursive=True) for path in targets: clear_dir(path, remove=True) |